s sa sb sc sd se sf sg sh si sj sk sl sm sn so sp sq sr ss st su sv sw sy

Перевод: seafaring speek seafaring


[прилагательное]
мореходный;
[существительное]
мореплавание
[существительное]


Тезаурус:

  1. Perhaps because of our seafaring and imperial history, British people rate very high in this international league table, second only after the Dutch, who possibly derive their skills and abilities from the same type of background.
  2. His great enthusiasm was for sailing and in the vacations he would take parties of students on seafaring expeditions.
  3. So I drove to Portsmouth expecting a great camel of the ocean, a small luxury liner even, at least a boat that could hold its head up in the seafaring world.
  4. Shipping and seafaring are among the exhibits in the town's Shetland County Museum.
  5. The uses of plants are legion: for medicine, for food and drink, for domestic, agricultural and seafaring purposes, for magical functions, or simply for luck.
  6. They knew also a Law Merchant which was different from the Common Law and had an international character, a law founded on the commercial customs of merchants and seafaring men of all nations.
  7. Among other personal touches, he introduces seafaring imagery on several occasions: Christ is helmsman in psalm 31, and in psalm 89 he adds to the raging sea of verse 9 a reference to the navy which is very expressive of his Englishness.
  8. Southey's seafaring brother, Tom, was an early recruit to the scheme, as was Southey's widowed mother in Bath (even though she told him she thought he was mad).
  9. The city's architecture captures the memory of the 17th century wealth of a seafaring and predominantly trading nation.
  10. It was business as usual in the ancient seafaring town of Sinkport.
  11. The southern area (Canning Town) is the abode of workers at the docks, gas works and sugar refineries, marmalade and rubber factories: there is also a fleeting population of seafaring men of various races who help to provide a livelihood for the keepers of numerous common lodging houses
  12. By the time of Elizabeth's death in 1603 Englishmen did not rule any more land outside the British Isles than they had done 45 years earlier but their seafaring position had been transformed.
  13. The burlesque is most apparent where learned words keep company with the homely and seafaring vocabulary associated with the Captain: in his delicacy, sheered off again confounded, in the full lustre of the ankle-jacks.

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